Clinging to my gods and my guns while I chronicle the demise of western civilization from my bunker deep in the woods of northern Canada.

Saturday, 8 March 2014

This Story Just Slays Me

This story from Haaretz just slays me. Do these Muslims think anyone is foolish enough to believe their lies? Notice this one comes from the 'head' of the Assembly of Experts in the Islamic Republic of Iran.

Sigh.

On the other hand just because they are dumber than sacks of excrement doesn't make them dangereous. One cannot help but wonder how many fools in their own country believe this.

Ayatolla Mahadavi Kani says in a video circulating in
social networks that the Jewish scientist found proof to his Theory of
Relativity in the ascension of the Prophet Mohammed.

An Iranian cleric claims that the Albert Einstein, the great 20th century
scientist who developed the Theory of Relativity, was a Shiitie Muslim, Israel
Radio reported on Saturday.

The report cites a video by
Ayatolla Mahadavi Kani, described as the head of the Assembly of Experts in
the Islamic Republic of Iran, who says that there are documents proving the
Jewish scientist embraced Shiite Islam and was an avid follower of Ja'far
Al-Sadiq, an eighth-century Shi'i imam.

In the video, Kani quotes Einstein as saying that when he heard about the
ascension of the prophet Mohammed, "a process which was faster than the speed of
light," he realized "this is the very same relativity movement that Einstein had
understood."

The ayatollah adds: "Einstein said, 'when I heard about the narratives of the
prophet Mohamad and that of the Ahle-Beit [prophet's household] I realized they
had understood these things way before us.'"
Reports of Einstein's affinity to Islam circulated in 2012 as well, when the grandson of the late
Ayatollah Hossein Borujerdi claimed the scientist was "corresponding with the
cleric and had admitted Shia Islam was the most scientific and just religion in
the world."

According to those reports, Einstein's correspondence with Ayatollah
Borujerdi is kept in a London safe box. Luckily, the readers were provided with
the code to open it: B-۱۲-D.E/۱۷-V.A.E.